70 Wonder why anvbodv evertJses stamps? Iíé. , Wonder why anybody ever uses sta1l1ps1 tw\ ' Wonder why anybody ever uses statnps1 flt/ - """"""'" . , a w hen the y c ä n sel postage mete r!! . · . which prints a stamp direc the envelope, in any amount, for any kind of mail, when and as needed, in your own office... and seals the envelope flap at the same time! The Postage Meter is the successor o the adh sive stamp, the modern means of stamping and sealing business mail. Time and effort saving. The meter holds any amount of postage you want it to hold, absolutely safe, protected from loss or theft. . . and keeps its own records, accounts automatically for postage used... Provides postage on tape for packages or parcel post. . . Indispensable in thousands of offices-for more than twenty years. Pitney- Bo\ves makes models for every business, big or little. . . Call the nearest office-or write for a booklet that explains Metered Mailing. , - ., ft - . " , /\ ,,-. ; 'iI_ f( ' á j " I 'I . 1 ' . ' , - I .. ., I? ITNEY-BOWES Postage Mete.- PITNEy-BOWES, INC., 1693 Pacific S1., Stamford, Conn. Originators of Metered Mail. Largest makers of postage meters Offices in princiPal cities. IN CANADA: Canadian Postage Meters, Ltd. . nelope darted to a side window of the house and stood on tiptoe in her plat- form-soled scarlet sandals, looking in- side. "That room you are looking at," I went on, "I suppose was the dining room. That is where they gave the great dinners. The Windsors were the last ones entertained there. Of course, the ffamous silver service has all been put away." I went over and stood beside her. There was one bulb burning sadly, casting a melancholy light through the room. The walls were covered with an old-fashioned, figured brown wallpaper. "It's -sad, isn't it?" I said. "Think of all the people wh used to dine in there. Women in tiaras, women in aigrettes, all those lovely dresses they used to wear in the evening. Of course, you've never seen any like them, growing up in a war, but they were élé gantes in the real sense of the word. Imagine, in this room, if they wore peacock blue or yellow satin., against this brown background. Lovely, Penelope? " She didn't seem to hear, having lnoved on to the next window. "But it looks just like a bank to me," she said suddenly. I peered in too. She was right, she was certainly right. Well, that )Vas all. That was the end of my long career of infallibility. I didn't even have time to explain that I had been momentarily confused and had thought we we:r.e up at Fifty-first Street, for a cab came along just then and Penelope helped me in respectfully, and a little pityingly, too, I felt. "Goodbye," she said. "And thank you so much for trying to help me." T HA T was six months ago. I have had a restful half year ,of being absolutely wrong about everything, and no one to catch me at it. I had almost forgotten about Penelope and her am- bitions when a postcard came the other d " H . " . d " H . aYe 1, It rea. ave been mean- ing to tell you I was in summer stock on the Cape. Really sharp. And we're going to crash Broadway. Another girl and I are going to have an apart- ment, and you must come to dinner a lot. From now on, I'm going to take care of J'ou." -HENRIETTA FORT HOLLAND . OUR OWN BUSINESS DIRECTORY (NEAR MISS SECTION) The Carroll Lombardi Pharmacy, 868 Lexington Avenue. Shirley Terminal Shops, Inc., Grand Cen- tral.